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The Daily News-Journal from Murfreesboro, Tennessee • 10
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The Daily News-Journal from Murfreesboro, Tennessee • 10

Location:
Murfreesboro, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

10, The Daily News Journal, Murfreesboro, Tuesday Afternoon, Aug. 18, 1970 Franjieh--- (Continued from Page 1) jieh, 60, a well-to-do landowner, and now, economy minister, would continue Lebanon's proWestern role and moderate course with the Arab guerrillas who maintain encampments in the southern part of the nation. Such a course probably would mean he will let the guerrillas stay and carry out occasional raids across the border into Israel so long as they adhere to rules agreed upon last November. Like all his predecessors, Franjieh is a Maronite Christian. By tradition, Lebanon's president is always a Christian with.

the prime minister a Moslem since the nation is almost evenly divided between the two religions. (Continued from Page 1) the military into action. "I am certain that the drug problem, and particularly the marijuana problem, is much worse than the Department of Defense statistics have indicated," Dodd said. "This kind of thing has been allowed to go on too long in my opinion and it is getting out of hand. It has got to be he said.

Relations between the two nations have deteriorated since late July when Egypt accepted U.S. peace proposals for the Middle East and Iraq rejected them. Palestinian guerrillas, who have ignored the cease-fire and have continued attacks on Israel, are involved in discus: sions with both Egypt and Iraq. Yasser Arafat, chief of the Al-Fatah guerrilla organization, met with Iraqi leaders in Baghdad Monday for what Baghdad Radio said were talks on the "serious situation" in the Middle East. Baghdad Radio repeated today Iraq has placed its 12,000 troops stationed in Jordan at the disposal of the Palestinian guerrillas.

Political observers interpreted the statement as an attempt to put pressure on Jordan, which has accepted the cease-fire. Another delegation from AlFatah met in Cairo Monday with Mohammed Hassanein Heikal. Egypt's minister of national guidance, Al Ahram reported. (Continued from Page 1) under siege by Egyptian Gas--. (Continued from Page 1) with sophisticated navigational equipment, was to remain at the scene to chart the final resting place of the ship.

The Hartley also will collect water samples from bottles equipped with radios and lights that will be released when the Briggs reaches the bottom. The bottles will be taken to Mayport, near Jacksonville, where a Naval laboratory will determine if, as some feared. the 418 concrete vaults of obsolete nerve gas rockets burst open immediately under the crushing pressure of three miles of water. During congressional and federal court hearings, the Army asserted there would be no danger to human life even if all the gas was released at once. Experts said sea water would neutralize the gas through a process called hydrolysis, killing only a limited amont of sea life.

The Army said it hoped the vaultes would rot away over a period of time, releasing the gas slowly. It said there was much more danger in allowing -the deteriorating and unstable rockets to remain above ground. The argument convinced disgruntled congressmen and the U.S. Court of Appeals, which rejected a suit brought by the state of Florida and environmentalists, to stop the dump. The 10-ship flotilla encountered rain and rough seas after leaving the military terminal at Sunny Point, N.C., Sunday, forcing it to slow from its planned 10-knot speed to six knots.

However, skies cleared early Monday night and the vessels picked up speed again. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird and other Pentagon spokesmen say they no longer use concrete as a means of controlling gas weapons. They say the Army now has means of detoxifying the gas on land, and it will never again be necessary to sink it at sea. Court's---, (Continued from Page I) 30 days to come up with another bid one in excess of the last one.

The court is expected to select an appraiser for the job. After he has made his deduction and reported to the court the court will then meet and seek to adjust its offer for the units It is indicated that the court and the GSA are "far apart." 'Copters--- (Continued from Page 1) 31 others. U.S. Command nounced today that the member Marine Wing Group 17 began leaving Japan as part of the administration's Phase 4 drawal of 50,000 men from war zone by Oct. 16.

Anderson (Continued from Page 1) takeover and requested the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce to undertake an urgent investigation of the high prices of coal. security of the Nation is at stake," he added. 269--- (Continued from Page 1) Honeycutt, Penny Lee Hooper, Martha N. Trevathan Ison, Patricia Louise Jaros, Gary Russ Johnson, David Marchs Jones, Kathy D. Randolph Jones, Rhonda Leming Jones, Nance Bennett Jordan, Nancy Charline Jordan, Sherry Melissa Knox, Patricia Lorraine Lane.

Thomas Marshall Lane, James Oron Ledford. William James Leonhirth, Opal Juanita Leyhew. Linda Brown Manning, Felix Mathias Massey, Karon Rae Matheny, Marsah. Lominack MacClure, Rita Hare McKnight, Barbara Gale Meerdink, Judy Baker Merrill, Marian L. Brown.

Modrall, Teddy Gene Morris, Brenda Gayle Smith Murphy, Maryin Monroe Nichols, Betty Sloan Orton, Nancy Jean Parks, Patsy Cope Patton, Larry Edward Payne, Nancy Comer Phillips, Peggy Jo Posey, Marsha Jo Ragsdale, Sampson Parham Reavis, Donna Marie Rinehart, Judy Ann Pitts Roberson, Martha Diane Rooker, Harold Bedford Rose, Clarence Thomas Rowland, Sister Ann Catherine Rudis, Donald Ray Russell. Wendell White Secrest Gloria Ann Shacklett, Frances Campbell Singer, Susan Gilbert Smith, Betty C. Clark Smotherman, Patricia Casey Steele, Bobby Eugene George R. Stotser, Rachel Morgan Strickland, Judy Deane Patricia Casey Steele, Bobby Eugene Story, George R. Stotser, Rachel Morgan Strickland, Judy Deane Templeton, George John Traver, Hildegarde Spear Traywick, Marla Marie Vander-karr, Pamela R.

White, Linda Faye Wood, Lois Endean Deter Woodard. Students included on the Honor Roll are: Rosalind Ross Akin, Edward Kelly Barnett, Dora Ella Bennett, Louise M. Benoit, Betty Marie Burkhalter, Donald Bruce Clifton, Janice Holland Coleman, Judy Ann Cooper, Joy Phifer Coffedge, Joy Sullivan Cox, Barbara Ann Crenshaw, Judith Ann Crowder, Sister Philip Joseph Davis, Nancy Louise Dinkins, Beverly True Edens, Priscilla Lewis Freeman, Priscilla Phillip Gilliland, Hoge Milton Greene, Laura B. Bowling Harper, Sheila Rae Hendrikson. Martha N.

Trevathan Ison, Patricia Louise Jaros, Gary Russ Johnson, David Marcus Jones, Kathy D. Randolph Jones, Rhonda Leming Jones, Nance Bennet Jordan, Richard Ernest LaLance, Patricia Lorraine Lane, William James Leonhirth, Opal Juanita Leyhew. Dorothy L. Eckhert McClean, Felix Mathias Massey, Marsha Lominack McClure, Barbara Gale Meerdink, Judy Baker Merrill, Marian L. Brown Modrall, Ted Gordon Morgan, Marvin Monroe Nichols, Sampson Parham Reavis, Judy Ann Pitts Roberson, Clarence Thomas Rowland, Sister Ann Catherine Rudis, Wendell White Secrest, Callie Ann Simmons, Frances Campbell Singer, Susan Gilbert Smith, Betty C.

Clark Smotherman. Patricia Casey Steele, Bobby Eugene Story, George R. Stotser, Rachel Morgan Strickland, Judy Dean Templeton, Marla Marie Vander-karr, David Andrew Womack, Linda Faye Wood, and Lois Endean Deter Woodard. Wall Street Chatter Over the next four to six weeks, most stocks seem likely to head downward, with many of the weakest performers making new lows and large numbers of others backing down from heavy lines of resistance, according to TPO Inc. This could prove healthy in the long run, provided most issues hold above their lows of the year, it believes.

The firm recommends deferring purchases of leading performers until strong support levels are reached. China Will Aid Exiled Prince By ALBERT E. KAFF TOKYO (UPI)-Communist China announced today it will supply military aid to the government-in-exile of deposed Cambodian Prince Norodom Sihanouk fight "U.S. imperialism" in Cambodia. The announcement from the official New China News Agency (NCNA) monitored in Tokyo said the aid treaty was signed Monday in Peking but did not nature of the military assistance.

China has provided small arms, communications equipment, field equipment rice for North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces. Sihanouk received aid from China before he was overthrown March 18 and much of the Cambodian army still is armed with Chinese AK47 rifles. The announcement also said Peking, provided a loan to Sihanouk's government-in-exile in May. The amount and terms were not disclosed. The NCNA dispatch said: "In order to support the Cambodian people in their just war against U.S.

imperialism and its lackey, the Lon Nol. clique, and to further strengthen the profound traditional friendship between the peoples of China and Cambodia, the government of the People's Republic of China and the royal government of National Union of Cambodia signed in Peking today (Monday) an agreement on providing gratuitous military aid by China to Cambodia in 1970." Lon Nol heads the Cambodian government formed when Sihanouk was ousted. The agreement was signed by Huang Yung Sheng, chief of the general staff of Communist China's army, and Duong Sam 01, minister of military equipment armament Sihanouk's forces. Communist Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai and Sihanouk's prime minister in exile, Penn Nouth, attended the ceremony, NCNA said. Sihanouk, in answer to written questions by the mass, circulation newspaper Asahi Shimbun of Japan, said he would remain in Peking a while longer before moving his governm to Cambodia.

He said Chou and North Vietnamese Premier Phan Van Dong "are of the view that I should wait for a while before I return to Cambodia because conditions relative to the security are not complete in the liberated areas." Man With 'Money' Died Of Lung Congestion ATLANTA (UPI)-A 28-yearold Orlando, man whose body was found in a motel room here along with $150,000 in counterfeit $20 bills died of a pneumonia-like lung congestion, an autopsy revealed. Special Agent A. B. Wentz of the U. S.

Secret Service said the body of Robert Lewis Williams, who checked into the motel Sunday morning, was found by a maid the same After the autopsy report. was released late Monday afternoon, Wentz said a doctor from a Tennessee town, which he refused to specify, had tried unsuccessfully on three occasions last week to convince Williamsto enter a hospital. He added that a quantity of cold and cough medicines and antibiotics was found in the motel room. Wentz said the money found in Williams' room was part of a series of counterfeit bills which had been circulating for about six weeks and the Secret Service wa's still investigating their origin. The bills had also shown up in Savannah, and Montgomery, Went said.

Identification papers found on the body listed two addresses, he said, one in Orlando and the other in Fort Pierce, Fla. 'Bolivian Legend OfLove' By PATRICIA McCORMACK. NEW YORK (UPI)-Astronomers and lunarnauts, hear this: Those dark areas on the full moon's surface really, were made by a lovesick skunk's smooches. if you don't believe it, never tell Bolivian children. They accept the legend of.

the skunk, Anathuya, who fell in love with the moon, persuaded a big bald eagle fly him there, and, once there, planted a lot of kisses on the surface. The skunk is dead now but every time the children see the smudges on the moon, they say the marks were made by the fury skunk with the pink snout. Four Books Put Together The legend is recorded on the UNICEF "Children's Book of (Stackpole Books, Har- Obituaries Mary Stevenson Mrs. Mary Stevenson, 444 East Forrest Street, died Monday at Rutherford Hospital. Funeral services are incomplete, but will be announced from Scales Funeral home.

She was a member of the first Baptist Church. Survivors include 6 sons, Albert McAdoo, Edward Mc Adoo, Robert McAdoo, Eugene Stevenson, all of Nashville; Sam McAdoo, Long Branch, N.J., Paul Stevenson, Lebanon, and one daughter, Mrs. Serena Williams, Miami, Fla. Rufus cAdoo Rufus W. McAdoo, Route 5 Murfreesboro, drowned Saturday at Percy Priest Lake.

He was 25 years of age. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday from Tabernacle Baptist Church with the Revs. A.C. Gaston, Neal Patterson and W.A.

Alsup officiating. Burial will be in Dilton Cemetery. Scales Funeral home is in charge. Mr. McAdoo was born in Rutherford County son of Mr.

and Mrs. Joe Edmond McAdoo. In addition to his parents, he is survived by 3 sons, Rufus McAdoo Jr. Nathaniel Pierre and Jame Lewis McAdoo, all of Murfreesboro; 2 brothers, James Edward McAdoo, Murfreesboro, Sgt. Sam T.

McAdoo, Fort Gordon, a grandmother, Mrs. Lara' McAdoo. Friends may visit with the family at the funeral home from 8 to 10 p.m. tonight. Businesses To Pay Taxes Quarterly NASHVILLE (UPI) The State Revenue Department announced today it will permit about 12,000 business in Tennessee to pay sales taxes on a quarterly basis, a move that will save Tennessee, taxpayers about $100,000 a year.

Revenue Commissioner Tom Benson said that the businesses will be notified within the next month that they can discontinue filing the report with the department on a monthly The change is being made to relieve small retailers, wholesalers and manufacturers of the work and expense of filing monthly returns as well as to improve the efficiency of sales tax administration, Benson said. Benson said the change would reduce by nearly 100,000 the number of sales tax returns processed each year by the department. Benson said the new policy is part of Gov. Buford Ellington's program to reduce the cost of state government. The legislation necessary to allow the quarterly filing was part of the Ellington legislative program submitted to the general assembly last year.

Benson said only dealers whose average monthly liability is $15 or less and who have a good payment record with the department for the previous 12 months will be qualified to file on the quarterly basis. Benson said it is estimated that one out of every six sales tax permit holders will qualify. Benson said it is estimated that one out of every six sales tax permit holders will qualify. The department computers are now sorting out the names of those that qualify and these will be notified by the sales tax division. OFFICIAL ARRESTED VIENNA (UPI)-Maximillian Kovacic, 41, an official of the Austrian Interior Ministry, was arrested Monday on charges of spying for Czechoslovakia.

An Interior Ministry spokesman indicated Kovacic's activities were uncovered by a Czechoslovak agent who defected recently to the West. More U.S., Okinawan Friction Coming Up an615- Support for Nixon withthe By ALBERT E. KAFF NAHA, Okinawa (UPI)-Look for more and perhaps increasing friction between Americans and Okinawans during the next two years of U.S. military occupation. Okinawans demonstrated and the Socialist chief executive, Chobyo Yara, protested when a U.S.

military court sentenced an American soldier to three years in prison for stabbing a 16-year-old girl and attempting to rape her. Yara said the sentence was too ligyt. He wants to try the American servicemen in Okinawan courts and speed up the end of the U.S. administration of the fortress island, the only Japanese territory still occupied by American troops. The United States is scheduled to return the island to Japan in 1972.

SAIGON (UPI) -Businessmen expect South Vietnam to devalue its currency in a blow against the black market in money. If so, war costs may go up for the United States. Officially, one U.S. dollar now is worth 118 Vietnamese piasters, but Americans and other holding U.S. money can get up to 400 piasters for one dollar on the black market.

Saigon businessmen expect the new government rate will be between 225 and 240 piasters to the dollar. SAPPORO, Japan (UPI)Signs are that the district attorney will reject murder charges filed against the only Japanese surgeon to perform a heart transplant, Dr. Juro Wada. A practicioner of China's ancient herb medicine filed murder charges against Wada, who performed Japan's first and heart transplant two years The recipient died 83 only, days later. Sources close to the investigation say the murder charges will be dropped for lack of conclusive evidence.

Wada, educated in the United States, told UPI he could never consider a second heart transplant until the legal question is solved. SEOUL (UPI) -The United Nations Commission for the Unification and Rehabilitation of Korea (UNCURK) continues grinding out reports 20 years after it was established to unite North and South Korea. The commission, composed of Australia, Chile, Pakistan, the Philippines. ALLIED PAWN FULL VALUED LOANS, ON AT THE SQUARE For Confidential Help When Drinking is a Problem ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS Phone 893-0854 P. O.

Box 562 KODAK -FINISHING 12-Exposure Roll A. L. Smith Co. Phone 893-7971 Revival Services HAYNES CHAPEL United Methodist Church AUGUST 17-28 7:30 P.M. Each Evening Rev.

William M. Moss Speaker Rev. William A. Moss Special Music and Singing DA VID C. ERICKSON Pastor "Come to Worship Leave to Serve" risburg, The book is one of four put together by William I.

Kaufman, a writer-editor. theatrical producer, teacher writer who loves children- and the spirit of hope their innocence exudes everyplace on earth. Kaufman, of New York, spent five months touring 42 nations in his quest for heart-and-soul material for the books. The others are: "UNICEF Book of Children's Prayers," "UNICEF Book of Children's Sons," "UNICEF Book of Children's Poems." "The legends express distinct thoughts, feelings, beliefs, joys, dreams and hopes of each of the nations in which they are born," Kaufman said. there are certain threads that bind them together.

speak of heroic deeds of historic characters; others peer at the supernatural, talking turtles, dragons, magic birds. stimulate the imagination and entertain. Teach Various Things The lengs, as the prayers, sons and poems, teach something about success and failure, justice and injustice, hate and love. Among the prayers there is one children in Ecuador say to stop a dog from biting. It goes like this: ferocious animal.

God was born first, then you." prayers, according to Kaufman, the children are reaching for the spiritual comfort which "we all seek and which we all need if we are to live together in happiness and peace." FOR WEAR ON CONCRETE In No Waiting Large Range of Sizes and Widths. Credit Cards Welcome RED WING MARTIN'S So. Side Sq. Ph. 893-6983 MARTIN'S SHOES RED GOOSE Shoes "Nalf The Fun of Having Feet" BOYS' RED GOOSE BACK-TO-SCHOOL Reg.

10.00 BOYS' RED GOOSE BACK- Reg. 10.00 Sizes Sizes Shoes 1-4 PRICE Shoes 1-4 PRICE MEN'S BOOTS Black Smooth and Brown Brushed Reg. MEN'S MEN'S SHOES $1495 Reg. $1495 BOOTS $095 $1195 Reg. $095 Bob Smart SHOES FOR MEN Values ONLY to ONLY $1495 $5,00 While They Last $695 MARTIN SHOES 22 South Side Square 893-6983.

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Pages Available:
782,336
Years Available:
1858-2024